Visitors keep bouncin'? There are many methods and a few simple steps to take which will improve your plight. We've rounded up the 10 best ways to reduce your bounce rate below:

The bounce rate measures the percentage of users who visit a website but they leave the site after viewing one page. The number can be found in Google Analytics.

You want people to visit your website and think "this looks interesting, let's stay here and look around," but if they don't like what they see and decide to click the back button instead, they are bouncing off.

High = people are unengaged by irrelevant content

Low = people are engaged by relevant content

The longer a user stays on your website means they will more likely want to buy a product or service.

How to reduce bounce rate

1. Create useful landing pages

Create pages that have relevant content and are useful to the user. If your content isn't useful, why would they want to stay?

2. Engaging content

Create pages and blog posts with interesting content. Your content needs to be engaging. Imagine your website is a book and you're trying to keep your reader from putting the book down. Writing content can be easy but writing content that people actually want to read can be a challenge. Engage by creating content that answers questions and offers helpful and relevant information.

3. Images

People like pictures. They can be rewarding to look at and they can instantly engage with the reader. Images of wondrous locations or engaging people can have a positive effect on your visitors. Pleasing images can make people stay longer because they are immersed by the experience of your website.

4. Create relevant Call-to-Actions (CTA)

Call-to-Actions are created to persuade someone to make an action. Do you want your visitor to download, sign up or fill out a contact form? Make sure the CTA is relevant to the content on the page. Your visitor is on a certain page for a reason, create a Call-to-Action that answers their need.

5. Optimisation

6. Speed

Remember back in the day when we would sit patiently and wait for a page to load. Well, those days of patience are over. If your website takes 10 seconds to load, the likelihood is a visitor won't wait until the page has loaded and will just look elsewhere instead.

7. Easy navigation

Make your website clear and easy to follow. Having a sitemap is a useful way for people to navigate your site easily but make sure your tabs and pages are clearly labeled so your site visitors know what is going on.

8. More pages

The bigger the website, the more likely a person will stay on your site because they have more to explore. With this step it's also important to keep your content relevant and engaging. Take some time to plan and question what types of pages your website would benefit from.

9. Make it pretty

You can usually tell if you have landed on an old and abandoned website. The layout is basic and the graphics are poor. Design your website with interesting images. Cool slideshows and interactive images can do wonders!

10. Understand your audience

You need to understand your audience. Understand what they are thinking when they arrive on your site. Are they looking for a service or a product? Perhaps they are just browsing but are willing to be persuaded by good content. Your website needs to be crafted to interact with your audience at different stages of their buying journey.

When your visitors land on your website you need to answer their questions or persuade them effectively.